Can the Pacific Ocean withstand another 50 million tons of radioactive water as the West Coast of North America shows signs of barrenness

The Big Wobble: Can the Pacific Ocean withstand another 50 million tons of radioactive water as the West Coast of North America shows signs of barrenness

Can the Pacific Ocean withstand another 50 million tons of radioactive water as the West Coast of North America shows signs of barrenness

Photo Ibtimes.co.uk

In March 2011 a mag 9, one of the biggest
earthquake ever recorded struck Honshu on the Japanese north east coast causing
a tsunami, the deaths of 18,000 souls and crippling the now infamous Fukushima
Nuclear Plant.

Since that day the stricken plant has been
leaking 300 tons of radioactive water into the Pacific Ocean which is nearly a
million tons, TEPCO (Tokyo Electric Power Company) claims it will take at least
another 40 years to fix the problem, which, give or take, will be another 50
million tons of radioactive water leaked into the Pacific, incidentally the technology
to fix the Fukushima melt down has not yet been invented.

In June 2011, a mysterious illness appeared
off the coast of Washington state which began killing star fish at an alarming
rate, the illness was dubbed sea star wasting syndrome, the sea stars were
literally tearing their own limbs from their body.

The ailment seems to hit starfish the
hardest, with smaller numbers of sea urchins and sea cucumbers reported falling
to it.

The illness quickly spread north to Alaska
and south to San Diego

No one knows what percentage of the West
Coast’s starfish is affected but in some areas they’ve been wiped out.

This was the first clue the all was not
well in the beautiful west coast of America.

Since June of 2013 the entire west coast of
North America, Canada and Mexico included, have experienced massive die offs of
all kinds of creatures.

Sea turtles, whales, sea lions, birds,
fish, star fish, dolphins and a whole host of other marine life are dying in
incredible numbers and the experts don’t know why.

In the winter of 2015 blue-footed diving
seabirds called Cassin’s auklets, had been washing up dead by the thousands on
beaches from San Francisco to Alaska, it is thought more than 250,000 died from
lack of food.

Last year tens of thousands of common
murres were the victims, an abundant North Pacific seabird, starved and washed
ashore on beaches from California to Alaska, researchers have pinned the cause
to unusually warm ocean temperatures that affected the tiny fish they eat.

A year after tens of thousands of the
common murres died, John Piatt, a research wildlife biologist for the U.S.
Geological Survey claims the deaths of the common murres is an indicator of the
regions’ health.

“If tens of thousands of them are
dying, it’s because there’s no fish out there, anywhere, over a very large
area,” Piatt said.

It is thought 500,000 of the common murres,
who look like thin penguins, died last year all though this could be just a
conservative guess because only a fraction of the dead birds likely reached the
shore.

There is no fish out there, he federal
government has issued a disaster declaration for Alaska’s pink salmon fishery
and several other salmon and crab fisheries along the West Coast. Gov.

Bill Walker requested the declaration after
last year’s pink salmon harvests in Kodiak, Prince William Sound, Chignik and
lower Cook Inlet came in far below forecast, the Alaska Journal of Commerce
reported.

The estimated value of Kodiak’s catch in
2016 was about $2 million, compared to a five-year average of $14.6 million.

The disaster declaration granted by U.S.
Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker on Wednesday gives Kodiak and the other
Alaska fisheries the ability to seek disaster relief assistance from Congress
because of the unexpected large decreases in salmon returns.

The collapse of Alaska’s salmon fishing is
not the only problem hitting the North-West Coast of North America in the last
couple of years, the amount of marine and bird life dying in the area is
astonishing, as the list below will prove.

In November 2016 National Geographic
published huge massive Puffin die off: Hundreds of birds are washing up dead on
the Pribilof Islands, Alaska, and causing alarm among scientists. They claim it
may be linked to climate change.

25th October 2016 – A mass die off of
sunflower starfish along the coast of British Columbia, Canada, was reported.

On the 28th July 2016 – 300 sea birds were
reported to have washed up dead since May in Washington State, America.

In July 2016 Alarming number of sea birds
was found dead on Victoria beaches, in Canada.

On the 17th June 2016 – A mass die off of
salmon in fish farms, due to ‘toxic algae’ in British Columbia, Canada was
reported.

On the 18th of March 2016: 10 dead sea
lions found were on beaches of Vancouver Island, Canada

On the 31st January 2016: A massive die off
of fish, ‘never seen before’ in Snake River, Washington

In January 2016 scientists claimed the Gulf
of Alaska seabird die-off is biggest ever recorded after finding another 25,000
dead birds.

In November 2015 a report by The federal Department of Fisheries and
Oceans claimed millions of B.C. salmon had mysteriously ‘just disappeared’ in
troubling year.

In October 2015 scientists reported seeing
large numbers of dead or sick sea otters turning up in the Kachemak Bay region.

In September 2015 scientists reported
hundreds of dead walruses were found on a beach area in the northwestern part
of Alaska.

Also in September Kodiak Island residents
were reported a massive number of common murres washing up dead on local
beaches.

In late August 2015, there were reports of
dead fish on Lake Koocanusa, Canada a scene similar to one that occurred on the
lake two years ago.

It’s not entirely understood what is
causing the death of thousands of kokanee salmon.

In the same month a lack of oxygen in
southern Hood Canal was blamed for killing fish, crab and other marine life,
according to Seth Book, a biologist with the Skokomish Tribe who has been
monitoring the marine waterway.

Through the month of August, Book and other
Skokomish staff have observed dead English sole and thousands of dead and dying
eel pouts on the beaches. They also have found masses of dead cockles and
butter clams, and on Friday, Book said he saw hundreds of crab along the
beaches that were trying to get to the surface to breath.

Also in August 2015, Hundreds of birds
washed up dead or dying, ‘apparently starving’, along the Oregon and Washington
coast,

In the same week More than 150,000 juvenile
steelhead Salmon died in a hatchery on the North Umpqua River in Oregon.

August 2015: The discovery of four dead
humpback whales in B.C. waters in a single week, shocked scientists just as
Alaska was also experiencing a surge of whale deaths.

Also in the same week unusually warm water
temperatures and low river levels where blamed for killing salmon in the
Matanuska and Susitna valleys Alaska. Hundreds of Arctic char, recently stocked
by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, have also gone belly up in Campbell
Point Lake, also known as Little Campbell Lake, inside Anchorage’s Kincaid
Park.

Heat was blamed for massive fish die-off at
Whatcom Falls hatchery in Washington on August the 6th 2015.

Two days earlier The Alaska Maritime
National Wildlife Refuge was receiving multiple reports indicating a
significant increase in dead and dying birds found on beaches in the Homer area
over the last two weeks.

In July 2015 it was reported half of
Columbia River, Washington State, sockeye salmon were dying due to hot water.

24th July 2015: A Large die off of birds,
plus fish and sea mammals was reported at Aleutian Islands, Alaska,

ANCHORAGE, Alaska: More dead whales were
found in the Gulf of Alaska following the sightings of nine fin whale carcasses
in late May and early June.

On the 24th of June 1,000 tons of salmon
died in a Seafood farm on Vancouver Island in Canada.

19th June 2015: Hundreds of spring Chinook
salmon were turning up dead in Oregon rivers.

18th June 2015 –A report claimed 9
endangered whales were found dead during the past few weeks in Alaska.